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  • A recent S&P report entitled 'Corporate Financial Disclosure in Greater China: Taking a Closer Look', has cast a withering eye over accounting practice in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
  • Nestlé has finally been given the go-ahead to complete its $2.8 billion takeover of Dreyer - a year after the deal was first announced.
  • Freddie Mac, the embattled US mortgage provider, reports that accounting irregularities will mean a revision of earnings by as much as $4.5 billion. But where accounting discrepancies are usually associated with bloated profits, earnings at Freddie Mac will be revised upwards.
  • Seiko Epson's billion-dollar listing in Tokyo has given a welcome boost to the global IPO market.
  • General Motors plans to sell $10 billion in bonds and convertible debentures this week to fund its pension liabilities.
  • Directors who engage in price-rigging or bid-fixing will face up to five years in jail under new laws that come into force in the UK today.
  • WPP stands to become the world's second largest advertising group after it won its takeover battle for Cordiant Communications.
  • Tyumen Oil could launch a $1 billion eurobond before the end of the year, its CFO revealed yesterday.
  • Corporate restructuring in Europe is set to increase over the nest few years as companies find little respite in unforgiving markets, according to two corporate restructuring heads.
  • JP Morgan Treasury Services has added Sarbanes-Oxley functionality to its Horizon operational risk management solution.
  • Investment-grade telcos in Europe are still heading in the right direction, according to latest research from Standard & Poor's.
  • Companies will be forced to set out their corporate governance practices in their annual reports, if plans by the EU get the go-ahead.